An American worker can produce either 5 cars or 8 tons of grain a year. A Japanese worker can produce either 4 cars or 9 tons of grain a year. To keep things simple, assume that each country has 100 million workers. Complete the following table with the number of workers needed to make one car or 1 ton of grain in the United States and Japan. Workers Needed to Make 1 Car 1 Ton of Grain United States 1/5 1/8 Japan 1/4 1/9 Use the blue line (circle symbol) to graph the production possibilities frontier for the American economy. Then use the green line (triangle symbol) to graph the production possibilities frontier for the Japanese economy. U.S. Japan 0 100 200 300 400 500 600 700 800 900 1000 500 450 400 350 300 250 200 150 100 50 0 Cars (Millions) Grain (Millions of tons) Complete the following table by determining the opportunity cost of a car and of a ton of grain for both the United States and Japan. Opportunity Cost of 1 Car 1 Ton of Grain (In terms of tons of grain given up) (In terms of cars given up) United States Japan Given this information, has an absolute advantage in producing cars, and has an absolute advantage in producing grain. Also, has a comparative advantage in producing cars, and has a comparative advantage in producing grain. Assume that without trade, half of each country's workers produce cars and half produce grain. Complete the following table with the quantities of cars produced and consumed in each country if there is no trade. Cars Produced and Consumed Tons of Grain Produced and Consumed (Millions) (Millions) United States Japan True or False: Both countries would be better off if they produced the good in which they have a comparative advantage and then traded 200 million tons of grain for 100 million cars. True False